There are few things worse than media self-examination. It's freighted with the kind of navel-gazing self importance that turns off all but the most egotistic insiders.
The mishugas surrounding Tim O'Reilly's attempt to get a bloggers to adopt a code of conduct (his is modeled on the guidelines adopted by the BlogHer group) smacks a little bit of this kind of self-involvement.
I get civility. I practice it. Always will. But the kind of code O'Reilly's is proposing is the kind of feel-good measure that will have no effect on the "problem," to the extent that there is a problem at all.
As Duncan Riley wrote on the 901am blog:Â
....those who think that a blogging code of conduct is the antidote to death threats and misogyny have about as much hope of success as I've got of space walking on Jupiter next year....
Reaction among the digerati has largely been strongly negative. People seem to feel there's a mob mentality developing. Michael Arrington writes:Â
...whenever someone, no matter how much I respect them, tries to tell me what I can and cannot do by defining "civility" around their own ideals, I tense up. It feels like a big angry mob is arming itself to the teeth and looking for targets, and I need to choose whether I'm with them or against them.
...The code of conduct and the mass of bloggers lining up behind it scares me a lot more than the hate comments and death threats
I've received in the past.
Robert Scoble had a similar reaction:
I do find disquieting the social pressure to get on board with this program. Tim O'Reilly is a guy who really can affect one's career online (and off, too). I do have to admit that I feel some pressure just to get on board here and that makes me feel very uneasy.
Well, with this much opposition it hardly seems like the villagers are at the door with torches and pitchforks. In fact, it looks to me that the code is dead on arrival.
O'Reilly's code would require bloggers to police themselves and the conversations that take place on their blogs for threatening language, libelous language, copyright infringement, and violations of privacy. But, except for the last matter, bloggers are already under a legal obligation to do these things or face potential civil or even criminal action. Contrary to popular belief, blog publishing is subject to the same legal standards of print publishing. There's really no need for an extra code on this score.
Interestingly the only measure in O'Reilly's code that would likely have an effect on blog incivility is the one that has met with the most opposition from the uber bloggers-banning anonymous comments.
I despise anonymous comments. Too often they function as a shield for precisely the kind of vitriol that creates problems, driving the level of discourse down to something that resembles a graffiti chain on a junior high school bathroom stall. Furthermore if the ethos of the social Internet is centered on personal responsibility, then taking responsibility for what you post-either on a blog or in comments-requires an openly declared identity. As a journalist, I was trained by both educators and editors, to allow source anonymity judiciously. It is an essential tool for reporting policy from the inside, for example, but it functions poorly in sport reporting when anonymous locker room sources pile on a coach or manager. Arrington and Scoble both refuse to ban anonymous comments. Fine. And certainly O'Reilly's requirement that bloggers confirm the e-mail addresses of people posting comments is impractical. But anyone who accepts anonymous comments should be conscious of the potential for abuse.
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